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Novel insight into the agonistic mechanism of alefacept in vivo: differentially expressed genes may serve as biomarkers of response in psoriasis patients
Authors:Haider Asifa S  Lowes Michelle A  Gardner Humphrey  Bandaru Raj  Darabi Kamruz  Chamian Francesca  Kikuchi Toyoko  Gilleaudeau Patricia  Whalen Mary S  Cardinale Irma  Novitskaya Inna  Krueger James G
Institution:Laboratory for Investigative Dermatology, Rockefeller University, New York, NY 10021, USA.
Abstract:Alefacept is an LFA3-Ig fusion protein that binds to CD2 and is thought to inhibit T cell activation by antagonism of CD2 signaling or by lysis of CD2(+) cells. Alefacept is potential future therapeutic for organ transplant recipients or graft-vs-host disease and is an approved therapeutic for psoriasis vulgaris, which is a T cell-mediated inflammatory disease. However, alefacept improves psoriasis in only approximately 50% of patients treated for 12 wk. We studied the immunologic effects of alefacept in a group of psoriasis patients during treatment. We found that T cells, especially CD8(+) T cells, were rapidly decreased in the peripheral circulation. Decreases in circulating T cells were not associated with induced apoptosis. Unexpectedly, in addition to suppression of inflammatory genes, we found a marked induction of mRNAs for STAT1, IL-8, and monokine induced by IFN-gamma during the first day of treatment in PBMC. We confirmed the agonistic effects of alefacept in PBMC in vitro, which were similar to CD3/CD28 ligation on T cells. These data establish that alefacept activates gene expression programs in leukocytes and suggest that its therapeutic action may be as a mixed agonist/antagonist. Furthermore, responding patients to alefacept treatment show unique patterns of gene modulation. Whereas alefacept down-regulated TCRs CD3D and CD2 in responders, nonresponders reveal a higher expression of T cell activation genes such as CD69 in pretreatment PBMC. These finding suggest a potential basis for categorizing responders vs nonresponders at an early time point in treatment or before treatment of a broad range of proinflammatory diseases. This study 1) establishes alefacept as a novel CD2 agonist molecule for induction of leukocyte activation genes (prior work proposed its mechanism as a CD2 antagonist) and 2) that differential activation of genes may categorize clinical responders to this agent, critical for cost-effective use of this drug.
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